Prison privatization has generally been associated with developments in neoliberal punishment. However, relatively little is known about the specific impact of privatization on the daily life of prisoners, including areas that are particularly salient not just to debates about neoliberal penality, but the wider reconfiguration of public service provision and frontline work. Drawing on a study of values, practices, and quality of life in five private‐sector and two public‐sector prisons in England and Wales, this article seeks to compare and explain three key domains of prison...
This is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published arti...
With the expansion of the use of private prisons and detention centres worldwide and the increasing ...
The primary aim of this research is to examine the extent which prison management has been influence...
In October 2011, HM Prison Birmingham was transferred from public to private management, under G4S....
This research is an extensive comparison of two maximum-security prisons in England. Its key aim was...
Public craftsmanship, as the normative prescription of a myriad of public values, is receiving renew...
Why have private prisons failed to live up to the promises of neoliberalism? Is there a better appro...
Published in association with The Prison Service Journal. The past decade has seen dramatic growt...
abstract: Recidivism rates in the United States are alarmingly high. The vast number of inmates who ...
Delivering correctional programmes in the prison environment has proved challenging, and desired out...
This paper discusses the quality of prison life and prison size in relation to the notion of ‘Scandi...
This independent study examines and empirically tests the effects of the privatization of prisons in...
The occupational cultures in which one is immersed have a profound impact on individual and group o...
To date, the debate over private prisons has focused largely on the relative efficiency of private p...
This essay looks at the meaning of New Public Management, its history in both economic theory and po...
This is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published arti...
With the expansion of the use of private prisons and detention centres worldwide and the increasing ...
The primary aim of this research is to examine the extent which prison management has been influence...
In October 2011, HM Prison Birmingham was transferred from public to private management, under G4S....
This research is an extensive comparison of two maximum-security prisons in England. Its key aim was...
Public craftsmanship, as the normative prescription of a myriad of public values, is receiving renew...
Why have private prisons failed to live up to the promises of neoliberalism? Is there a better appro...
Published in association with The Prison Service Journal. The past decade has seen dramatic growt...
abstract: Recidivism rates in the United States are alarmingly high. The vast number of inmates who ...
Delivering correctional programmes in the prison environment has proved challenging, and desired out...
This paper discusses the quality of prison life and prison size in relation to the notion of ‘Scandi...
This independent study examines and empirically tests the effects of the privatization of prisons in...
The occupational cultures in which one is immersed have a profound impact on individual and group o...
To date, the debate over private prisons has focused largely on the relative efficiency of private p...
This essay looks at the meaning of New Public Management, its history in both economic theory and po...
This is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published arti...
With the expansion of the use of private prisons and detention centres worldwide and the increasing ...
The primary aim of this research is to examine the extent which prison management has been influence...